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Somalia Celebrates Independence Anniversary Under Islamic Courts‎‎‎‎
ISSUE 233
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Index

This Week's Somaliland News

This Week's News coverage for Somaliland and Somalia

Headlines

An Irish Student Writes Her Thesis On ‎Somaliland’s Right For Self Determination‎‎

Video Shows Arabs Fighting In Somalia

South Africa Says Somaliland's Issue Should Be Treated Differently‎‎

Somaliland's Top Judge Relieved From Post Due To ‎Ill Health‎‎‎

Korean Deal Still On, Says Range, Despite Security ‎Concerns‎

Somali Islamists Renew Rejection Of Foreign ‎Peacekeepers‎‎‎‎‎

UNDP In Baidoa

Death For Muslims Who Fail To Pray‎‎‎‎‎

Regional Affairs

Somali Regional Leader Says He Does Not ‎Recognize Islamic Courts In Mogadishu

Djibouti Supports Iran's Stances‎‎

Pastoralists Plan Int'l Gathering In Ethiopia‎‎

Somali Islamic Cleric Eyes Fight With Ethiopian Army

Ethiopia: Terrorists Rule Mogadishu

Somalia Celebrates Independence Anniversary Under Islamic Courts

AU Leaders Suspend Recognition Of New Recs

East Africa And The Horn Of Africa: Human Rights ‎Defenders Form Network Of Support For Colleagues At Risk‎‎

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Nation Remembers 7 July Victims

Sheikh Aweys Won't Go Away (At Least by Himself)

''Somalia's Fluid Politics Move Toward Polarization''‎‎‎‎‎‎

Darfur’s Fragile Peace‎‎‎

The Somali Blogosphere

Kenyan Writer Warns Government Against "Entangling" In Somalia‎‎‎‎‎‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Briefing To The Inaugural Meeting Of The All Party Parliamentary Group On Somaliland

Somali Taliban

Tokyo Sexwale’s Acquisition Trail‎‎

Ethiopia: Interview: Prime Minister Meles Zenawi

Ugandan Paper Says Somali Transitional Government "A Dead Horse"

The US Proxies Who Haunt Washington

Somalia: A Case Study In Interventionism

Food for thought

Opinions

Book Review On Part 1: ‎
The Bedrock Of The ‎
Family By Mohammed Bashe H. Hassan

Somaliland: The Only Hope Remaining In ‎Africa's Pandora's Box‎‎‎‎‎‎

Somaliland Armed Forces; Are They Fit For ‎Purpose?‎‎‎‎‎

Change in Foreign Policy May Ease Our Isolative Situation‎‎‎‎‎

Time For Somaliland Lawmakers To Recognize Unilaterally The State Of Israel‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

The AU Must Not Let States With Dual Allegiances-Egypt And Sudan Bully Them‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎‎


By Douglas Mpuga

Washington, DC, July 03,2006 – On July 1st, Somalia celebrated its 40th year of independence and the formation of the present-day republic through the unification of British Somaliland and Italian Somaliland. The day was marked by low-key celebrations in Mogadishu, which is controlled by the Union of Islamic Courts. The Islamic Courts, who seek to spread their control throughout Somalia, have promised to expand their governing council to include members of civil society.           

Omar Aden Qadi is a journalist and a member of the civil society group that has been in contact with the Islamic courts. He told Voice of America English to Africa reporter Douglas Mpuga that the Union of Islamic Courts derives their strength from the people of Somalia, who appreciate the stability and peace in the areas controlled by the courts.

“People are actually welcoming the development, it is coming from the people, they are requesting that the courts go to their area.” He said the Transitional National government is confined to Baidoa and is very weak and inefficient but the Islamic courts are giving them a chance to organize.

Qadi said rumors that the Islamic courts had banned videos and closed movie theaters are untrue and are attempts at anti-Islamist propaganda. He said some courts that make up the consortium of the Union of Islamic courts had closed some movie theatres but the central command of the Islamic courts overruled them. “It wont be an extreme form of Sharia law, it will fail if it becomes so because it is not in the nature of Somalis to be controlled strongly and the courts know that.”

He added that the Union of Islamic Courts hesitates to be regarded as similar to the Taliban or extremists. Qadi said the Union of Islamic courts has promised to expand the ruling council to include civil society groups in two months. He said the courts would like to involve civil society as a way of forging unity and ensuring stability.

Source: VOA News


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